Thursday, September 26, 2013

I recently did a post on cooking buffalo short ribs, sous vide. While I was at Whisper Mountain Ranch in Oak Glen I also bought a few other cuts of buffalo, including additional ribs.

I've previously had buffalo ribs in Jack Daniels at the Fort in Colorado, which were overwhelmed by the sauce; buffalo ribs marinated in barbecue sauce from Whole Foods which were decent; and buffalo ribs in Estes Park which I still dream about, the first time they came with barbecue sauce and were very good and the next day I got them without the barbecue sauce and they were fantastic.

For these, I decided to cook them simply and quickly. I brushed on olive oil, rubbed on some Char-Broil All Purpose Rub and then broiled them in the oven. The broiling went quickly, the rub added nice flavor but did not overwhelm the natural taste and they were pretty tender and juicy. I had a smaller set and a larger set. The larger set I cooked a little longer and they were less rare. I liked the rarer ones a little more.

I prefer the buffalo to beef. It is less fatty, it has a slightly stronger flavor and the bones seem a little meatier.

Broiling is a better way to cook them than barbecuing. I liked these more than any I've had, including the short-ribs, sous vide, other than the ribs I had in Estes Park, and I think they were bigger and meatier. I'm thinking I'm going to buy more ribs when they are available. They are very simple and a very nice treat.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

The Gazi Husrev-beg Mosque in Sarajevo, Bosnia & Herzegovina is considered the most important Islamic building in Bosnia, one of the best examples of Ottoman architecture anywhere and the most visited Islamic building in the Balkans. The mosque complex included the mosque, a madrasa (school for study of the Islamic religion), Quranic school, khanqah (a building designed for gatherings of a Sufi brotherhood), soup kitchen, hospice, library, khan (roadside inn for caravans), bazaar, public baths and two tombs. It was built by Ajem Esir Ali, an architect from Tabriz who was taken as a prisoner by the Ottomans in Persia and became a chief architect in Istanbul.

View of the mosque from the bazaar.

An evening view shows the central dome and minaret.

East side view.

Door on the west side.

A stone fence surrounds the mosque.

A beautiful cat on the fence.

View toward the west side of courtyard with portion of clocktower.

The mosque is square with a central dome. Five cupolas are over a portico which is closed in on the sides and is supported by five columns. The portico facade includes a mihrab and four windows.

An aerial view of the mosque.

Portico with entrance and arches.

Entrance.

Muqarnas above the entrance.

Entrance door.

Cupola above the entrance.

A mihrab set into the portico.

The mihrab inside has seven tiers of muqarnas ornamentation. Muqarnas are a decorative device that are small pointed niches, stacked in tiers which project beyond lower tiers. The qibla wall (facing the direction of Mecca) around it is covered with painted decorations.

Mihrab with muqarnas above it.

Minbar with muqarnas to side and above it.

Other inner muqarnas.

The madrasa is composed of a square courtyard surrounded by 12 rooms on three sides with a domed classroom on the fourth side, facing the entrance. The entry features a six tiered muqarnas decoration. A small rectangular pool occupies the center of the courtyard. A passageway to the right of the classroom leads to the back garden. The hospice, soup kitchen, Quranic school and khanqah were removed in the 19th century. The madrasa was turned into a high school in the 1960s. A clocktower erected in the 17th century was rebuilt by the Austrians using a British clock and stands next to where the soup kitchen was.

Madrasa

Clocktower

Gazi Husrev-beg was the grandson of Sultan Beyazid II and the provincial governor of Bosnia in 1531 when he provided the funds to build the mosque. There are a couple of domed masonry tombs to the east of the mosque where Gazi and the administrator of his endowments, Murad-beg Tardic, are buried.

Tombs of Gazi Husrev-beg and Murad-beg Tardic

Other burial sites near the mosque.

The sadrvan, or fountain, is used for cleansing before entering the mosque.

Sadrvan or fountain.

The minaret is 47 meters high and it has a balcony.

The balcony is easy to see when lit up at night.

This was the first mosque in the world to receive electricity and electric illumination in 1898 when the area was under the control of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. During the siege of Sarajevo by the Army of the Republika Srpska, from April 5, 1992 to February 29, 1996, the mosque was hit by more than 100 artillery shells and was heavily damaged. Much of the money for restoration of the mosque came from Saudi Arabia and the restored mosque was missing much of the color and detail that was in the original mosque. Some claim this was because the restoration money came people belonging to an ultra conservative movement within Islam known as Wahhabism, which condemns idolatry and shrine visitation. After an outcry, a local team of conservation specialists has been restoring the mosque to its original state.